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David Kirkdorffer intoned: >I noticed very few Punk stylings in the inventories. Now, I'm not >trying to say Punk is good or bad nor do I care about definitions much >(please, let's not go there...). > >But - are there any PUNK Loopers out there? That's a curious one, but if you think about the entire image that punk presented, it was one that was fairly minimalist; to say nothing of the fact that during its primary period, there were no rack units of the kind we enjoy so much using, just stomp boxes/pedals. The moment one stopped just raging away and began fiddling with electronics - yes, even a tape loop! - I think it stops being punk, and begins being 'experimental', or any number of monikers we've all been stuck with at one time or another. For this reason, I think, bands like Sonic Youth are mistaken at times for punk. What I'd generally regard as REAL punks - people too busy playing fiercely at just their instruments, snubbing their noses and otherwise giving the Finger to 'established electronic sh*t' - well, maybe it comes from being around New York City (sorry, L.A., it didn't start out West!) at the time. Who knew? But that's just my opinion. Stephen Goodman * http://www.earthlight.net/Studios EarthLight Productions * Get the Loop Of The Week Free!